• Live.Coronavirus Spain today, last minute live
  • De-escalation. What can be done in Phase 1?
  • Deconfinement Phase 2: What can be done in the second phase of de-escalation

Spain continues to advance in the de-escalation and 70% of the country's population will be in Phase 2 on Monday. The Ministry of Health announced this Thursday that the entire Valencian Community , the decolonged provinces of Andalusia ( Malaga) are ready to climb this step and Granada ) and Castilla-La Mancha ( Toledo , Ciudad Real and Albacete ), as well as some health regions of Catalonia and El Bierzo in Castilla y León . The islands of La Gomera , El Hierroand La Graciosa (Canary Islands) and Formentera (Balearic Islands) are the outposts of Spain and will be the first to enter Phase 3 .

This Thursday, one day earlier than usual, the Minister of Health, Salvador Illa, and the director of the Coordination Center for Alerts and Health Emergencies, Fernando Simón, have appeared in Moncloa to announce the phase changes and update the map of the de-escalation, where the entire Andalusian and Valencian coast already appear in the same color and in Phase 2 a few weeks after the start of the summer season.

All phase changes will be effective from next Monday, June 1, and will last a total of 14 days, as has been the general rule in this transition towards what the Government calls "new normality".

The Valencian Community passed in its entirety to Phase 2 after a week earlier it gave the surprise with its request to voluntarily stay another seven days in Phase 1. Entoces framed that decision in "prudence" but now this allows all the Valencian Community is synchronized and hand in hand in the de-escalation. And it is worth remembering that not all of the region entered Phase 1 at the same time.

In Andalusia the expected has happened. The provinces of Malaga and Granada, which were initially off the hook, will share the condition of being in Phase 2 next week with the rest of the region. An accolade for the summer season.

The same has happened in Castilla-La Mancha with Toledo, Albacete and Ciudad Real. The three provinces take the next step, where Guadalajara and Cuenca are now.

With respect to Catalonia, the de-escalation continues to develop taking as a reference the health regions and not the provinces. In the new update, and as the Generalitat had claimed, the health areas of Girona, Central Catalonia, Alto Penedés and Garraf advance to Phase 2. For its part, the concern is now focused on Lleida, where 95 infections have occurred in five days. Illa has reproached that the cause has been uncivil behavior at a party with more people than allowed and due to infections in some companies' settings.

In Castilla y León, the geographical peculiarities of El Bierzo and its good epidemiological data will allow it to be the only one in the region to enter Phase 2. The rest will continue in Phase 1.

In the Canary Islands, the islands of La Gomera, El Hierro and La Graciosa and, in the Balearic Islands, the island of Formentera continue to be the forefront of de-escalation in Spain. All of them will enter Phase 3 on Monday and enter the month of June with a very good evolution.

In the Region of Murcia, the municipality of Totana passes to Phase 2, which was left out of prudence due to an outbreak last week. As the work has been good, it now accompanies the rest of the autonomy.

In accordance with the criteria of The Trust Project

Know more

  • Coronavirus Special
  • Coronavirus
  • Covid 19
  • Salvador Illa
  • Descaled
  • Spain
  • Fernando Simón
  • Valencian Community
  • Castilla la Mancha
  • Catalonia
  • Andalusia
  • Toledo
  • Pomegranate
  • Malaga
  • Albacete
  • Balearics
  • Canary Islands
  • Castilla y León
  • Real city
  • Basin
  • Girona
  • Guadalajara

Covid-19 51% of Spaniards will go to Phase 1 of the coronavirus de-escalation next Monday

CoronavirusThe Government opens to a de-escalation by zones after requesting several autonomies

Plenary of Congress All the opposition hardens its criticism and demands Pedro Sánchez a turn of the helm to prolong the state of alarm